| Turkestan Түркістан, Türkistan, Turkistan, |
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| Mausoleum of Khwaja Ahmad Yasavi | |
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| Coordinates: 43°17′N 68°16′E / 43.283°N 68.267°E | |
| Country | |
| Province | South Kazakhstan Province |
| Population | |
| - Total | 85,600 |
Coordinates: 43°17′N 68°16′E / 43.283°N 68.267°E
Turkestan is a city in the southern region of Kazakhstan, near the Syr Darya river. Turkestan is the Russian spelling; the proper transliteration of the Kazakh name is Türkistan (Kazakh: Түркістан), or simply Turkistan. It has a population of 85,600 and is situated 160 km (100 miles) north-west of Shymkent (Chimkent) on the Trans-Aral Railway between Kyzl Orda (Ak-Mechet, Perovsk) to the north and Tashkent to the south (43°17′N 68°16′E / 43.283°N 68.267°E).
Türkistan is one of Kazakhstan's historic cities with an archaeological record dating back to the 4th century. (For a brief description click here). It may even have been the capital of ancient Kangju (康居) and known to the Chinese as Beitian, before Zhe’she rose to prominence.[citation needed] Later it was known as Yasi or Shavgar and after the 16th century as Turkistan. It became a commercial centre after the final demise of Otrar, the medieval city whose ruins lie near the Syr Darya to the southeast.
The name Hazrat-e Turkestan literally means "the Saint (or Blessed One) of Turkestan" and refers to Khoja Ahmad Yasavi, the Sufi Shaikh of Turkestan, who lived here during the 11th century CE and is buried in the town. Because of his influence and in his memory the city became an important centre of spirituality and Islamic learning for the peoples of the Kazakh steppes. In the 1390s Timur (Tamerlane) erected a magnificent domed Mazar or tomb over his grave, which remains the most significant architectural monument in the Republic of Kazakhstan, pictured on the back of the banknotes of the national currency.
The city attracts thousands of pilgrims. According to a regional tradition, three pilgrimages to Türkistan are equivalent to one hajj to Mecca (such local piety is known also in relation to other religious monuments in the Muslim world). The Saint was held in such reverence that the city was known as the Second Mecca of the East, a vision which has helped shape the spiritual identity of Muslims in Kazakhstan.[1]
Other important historical sites in the city include a medieval bath-house and four other mausoleums, one dedicated to Timur's granddaughter and three to Kazakh khans (rulers).
Before the Russians came in the 19th century, Turkistan lay on the frontier of the settled Perso-Islamic oasis culture of Transoxiana to the south, and the world of the Turko-Mongol steppe nomads to the north. At times it became a symbolic Kazakh political centre, but by the early 19th century it was a marginal frontier town under the control of the Uzbek Khanates further south, lastly under the Khanate of Kokand.
When Turkistan fell to the Russians in 1864 it was incorporated into the Syr-Darya Oblast of the Governor-Generalship of Russian Turkestan. When the Tsarist regime fell in 1917-18 it was briefly part of the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic before being incorporated into the Kazakh SSR in 1924.
Modern-day Türkistan has a population of 85,600 (1999 census), almost half of whom are ethnic Uzbeks. The population rose by 10% from 1989-99, making it the second-fastest growing town in Kazakhstan, after the new capital Astana.
Turkestan may be reached by train from Almaty, in a journey of nearly 20 hours. The road trip from the nearest airport at Shymkent takes about two hours.
References
- ^ Bruce G. Privratsky, Muslim Turkistan: Kazak Religion and Collective Memory (Richmond, Surrey UK: Curzon Press, 2001)
External links
See also
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